Antonio Gasalla (born March 9, 1941) is a well-known Argentine actor, comedian, and theatre director.
Antonio Gasalla was born in Buenos Aires in 1941 and enrolled at the National Dramatic Arts Conservatory. He began his work in Buenos Aires' vibrant theatre scene in 1964 as an understudy, by which he befriended a colleague, Uruguayan émigré Carlos Perciavalle. He and Perciavalle collaborated on their production of Help Valentino!, which they performed in 1966 as a café concert, a popular medium in Argentina in which the duo became the most popular attraction. They accepted roles in film productions of Un viaje de locos (Madmen's Journey) and Clínica con música (Musical Clinic) in 1974. Though known for their comedy roles, they were also cast in 1974 by Sergio Renán for La tregua (The Truce), the first Argentine film nominated for an Oscar for Best Foreign Language Film. The duo parted ways subsequently, and Gasalla was cast in a comic role in Tiro al aire (Shot in the Dark), a 1980 family film starring Héctor Alterio.
Offbeat film director Alejandro Doria offered Gasalla the lead role in a 1985 comedy, Esperando la carroza (Waiting for the Hearse). Portraying Mamá Cora, a mischievous nonagenarian in need of attention from her self-absorbed family, Gasalla underwent four hours of prosthetic and makeup work daily, while shooting lasted. Receiving mixed reviews, the grotesque comedy was a commercial success and introduced Gasalla to a new act: female impersonation.
He appeared seldom on television work until 1990, when he was offered a comedy show, El Mundo de Gasalla (Gasalla's World), following which he hosted or starred in numerous other variety programs on Argentine television, mostly for Channel 9. The most popular of these was El palacio de la risa (The Palace of Laughter), where television audiences became acquainted with his feminine roles. His comic portrayals earned his first Martín Fierro Prize, the most prestigious in Argentine entertainment. Having had a falling out twenty years earlier, Gasalla and his erstwhile café-concert partner, Carlos Perciavalle, were reunited in a 1997-98 theatrical series in Punta del Este, Uruguay. Gasalla then returned to film in 2000, portraying Fredy, a homosexual man, in Almejas y mejillones (Clams and Mussels), and to the theatre, where he portrayed his numerous female characters from 2000 to 2004.
Antonio Gasalla's female impersonations remain the hallmark of his career not only for his intricate portrayals, but also for their sheer number. Some of the best-known over the years have included:
Grandma/Mamá Cora: a senile, though willful, nonagenarian.
Soledad Solari: a woman with multiple phobias.
Inesita: a high-society maven frequently under her plastic surgeon's knife (often with disastrous consequences).
Yolanda: an elderly, hypochondriac woman psychologically attached to her wheelchair.
Bárbara: a parody of television hosts Rona Barrett or Barbara Walters.
Noelia: an overdressed, eccentric schoolteacher.
Flora: an inflexible, petty public servant (roughly equivalent to Lily Tomlin's Ernestine the operator).
The Nurse: she loses more patients than she saves.
Mirta Bertotti: the middle-aged matriarch of a dysfunctional family.
Esther Estrés: Estrés translates as "stress" in Spanish.
Dr. Gutman: an indiscreet psychoanalyst.
Gasalla remains among the most successful Argentine theatre and television personalities. Following a May 4, 2009, guest appearance in Marcelo Tinelli's Showmatch (as Olga, the opinionated make-up lady), the popular variety show's ratings reprtedly jumped to some of the highest in local television history.
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